'There's a long way left for me' – Saifuddin

He said that he wanted to “show something” since he was playing in place of Rubel Hossain

Mohammad Isam24-Oct-2018When David Miller had struck Mohammad Saifuddin for five consecutive sixes in Potchefstroom a year ago, Mashrafe Mortaza and Tamim Iqbal couldn’t keep their cool back in Dhaka. Tamim remembers that he got really nervous for Saifuddin and screamed at his TV, urging him to bowl the wide yorker. He did, and Miller had to contend with 31 runs off the over.A month later, Darren Sammy took 32 off Saifuddin during the Comilla Victorians-Rajshahi Kings BPL match at the Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, where a year later Saifuddin was adjudged Player of the Match for his bowling performance against Zimbabwe. His 3 for 45 slowed down Zimbabwe particularly in the last five overs when he used a fine mix of slower bouncers and fuller length deliveries to stop their big-hitters.Saifuddin said that he wanted to support Mustafizur Rahman, who is one of the leading death bowlers in the world, by keeping the run rate around seven in the slog overs. He conceded 22 runs in his last three overs, picking up a wicket.”I have been bowling in the death overs in the Under-15 and Under-17, while playing under Miraz,” Saifuddin said. “I struggled in my early days in international cricket but I always speak to Miraz and Mustafizur, who is an experienced bowler. I tried to execute whatever I have learned.”It was a batting track. Having conceded some runs in Mirpur during the same period of the innings, we wanted to keep them under 250. Mustafizur is a superb death bowler. I supported him by giving away five to seven runs.”It was a far cry from the “has been” tag that some had put on him quite prematurely after he lost his place in the Bangladesh team earlier this year, having played two ODIs and two T20Is in January and February.Without doing anything flashy in domestic cricket or with the Bangladesh A team in the interim, Saifuddin was brought back because Bangladesh don’t really have a pace-bowling allrounder. He was earmarked from his age-group days as a future Bangladesh prospect. He was fast-tracked into the senior side last year, with disastrous results.Saifuddin said that one of the things he did was discuss handling pressure with the senior players.”I worked on the mental aspects of bowling,” Saifuddin said. “I have discussed it with senior players on how to approach bowling in international cricket. I have been quite expensive at this level previously. I will try to keep up what I did today. There’s a long way left for me.”I wanted Mash bhai to bring me into the attack. I wanted to show something since I am playing in place of Rubel [Hossain] . I wanted to do something different so that I get noticed.”Saifuddin also said that he drew inspiration from his mother’s advice about failing in life, while also using his experience of bowling at the death since his age-group days.”There will be some slips when you are trying to get success. My mother tells me that a baby may fall while taking his first steps but does that mean he will not walk? I will get hit but I will learn from it,” he said.

Mahmudullah, Mominul left out of Test squad; Nasir returns

Shafiul Islam has also found a spot in Bangladesh’s 14-man squad for the Test series beginning on August 27

Mohammad Isam19-Aug-20171:15

Isam: Questions over Mominul’s omission

Bangladesh have recalled allrounder Nasir Hossain, who last played a Test in August 2015, and medium-pacer Shafiul Islam, who last played in October 2016, for the first Test against Australia in Mirpur from August 27.

Squad changes

  • In: Shafiul Islam, Nasir Hossain

  • Out: Mominul Haque, Mahmudullah, Kamrul Islam Rabbi, Subhasis Roy and Rubel Hossain

Mominul Haque was dropped from the squad for the first time since his debut in March 2013, alongside senior batsman Mahmudullah, who was dropped after the first Test in Bangladesh’s tour of Sri Lanka earlier this year. Imrul Kayes, who batted at No. 3 as a replacement for Mominul in the second Test in Sri Lanka, was retained in the 14-man squad.After the end of the Sri Lanka tour, Mahmudullah scored a match-winning hundred against New Zealand in the Champions Trophy and helped Bangladesh reach the semi-final, but his return to the Test squad based on ODI form had been unlikely.Mominul was the subject of a number of questions during the press conference in Mirpur on Saturday. Chief selector Minhajul Abedin and coach Chandika Hathurusingha, who is also part of the selection committee, maintained that they didn’t want to change the winning combination from the Colombo Test in March. Mominul’s form in the last two Tests was given as a reason too.”Mominul made just one fifty in the last six innings,” Abedin said. “He was dropped because of his form. Imrul and Soumya are ahead of them. Soumya has four fifties in the last eight innings during this period, averaging 45.75. So that’s why Mominul went below in our consideration. He is our first choice among those not in the team. It is not the end of his career because he is dropped for the first Test.”Mominul is not unlucky because based on current form, others are ahead of him. There’s less pressure playing in away Test than a home game, so we didn’t take that into account.”Nasir last played against South Africa in 2015 while Shafiul played the Chittagong Test in October last year. The pair impressed in domestic limited-overs tournaments last season, as well as practice matches in the ongoing training camp in Dhaka and Chittagong. Nasir did well in the National Cricket League, averaging 109.33 in four innings, but in the Bangladesh Cricket League, he averaged just 30.87 in eight innings. Shafiul took 11 wickets in three matches in this season’s BCL.Hathurusingha informed that Nasir was picked as a like-for-like back-up for Mosaddek Hossain, who is suffering from an eye infection.Squad for the first Test: Mushfiqur Rahim (capt & wk), Tamim Iqbal, Imrul Kayes, Liton Das, Soumya Sarkar, Shakib Al Hasan, Sabbir Rahman, Mustafizur Rahman, Taijul Islam, Mehedi Hasan, Taskin Ahmed, Mosaddek Hossain, Nasir Hossain, Shafiul Islam.BCB XI for 2-day practice match against Australians: Mahmudullah (capt), Nazmul Hossain Shanto, Liton Das, Mominul Haque, Nasir Hossain, Mosaddek Hossain, Irfan Sukkur, Mohammad Saifuddin, Subashis Roy, Kamrul Islam Rabbi, Tanbir Hayder, Jubair Hossain, Abul Hasan

Plucky Zimbabwe chase historic series win

As Zimbabwe rediscover their fight, they stand on the cusp of winning their first series comprising two or more T20Is

The Preview by Sirish Raghavan19-Jun-2016

Match facts

Monday, June 20, 2016
Start time 1300 local (1100 GMT)The first T20I saw a return of the vibrant Zimbabwe the world loves to watch•Associated Press

Big Picture

Zimbabwe made a few changes to their team for the first T20I against India, most notably the inclusion of pluck, spirit and ebullience.Spirit was brought to proceedings when Hamilton Masakadza and Chamu Chibhabha punished India’s opening bowlers for missing their lengths. It intervened again when Elton Chigumbura, put a pair of golden ducks behind him to cream seven sixes in a dazzling half-century. That knock took Zimbabwe from a flagging 111 for 5 to a competitive 170.Pluck was a steady presence throughout the match, never more so than when Neville Madziva nailed wide yorkers and slower balls to defend seven in the last over. Ebullience came to the fore thereafter as the home team’s players and fans revelled. Zimbabwe will hope that Messrs P, S and E retain their place in the team for a long time to come.Of immediate interest is the second T20I in Harare, which will present the hosts a chance to secure a historic series win. Never before have Zimbabwe won a T20I series of two or more matches, although they did beat West Indies in a one-off T20I in Port of Spain six years ago. A win now would offer much needed cheer to their fans and send out a message to other teams thinking of sending a second-string side to Zimbabwe.For India, the wake-up call is timely – perhaps even welcome. Things seemed to be coming too easily to them in the ODI leg of the tour. On Saturday, however, they were put under serious pressure for the first time. They were reminded that sloppy mistakes can be costly, even against unfancied oppositions. How will India’s young side respond, now that they know they are in a genuine contest, with the series on the line?

Form guide

Zimbabwe: WLWWW (last five matches, most recent first)
India: LLWWW

In the spotlight

Chigumbura was Zimbabwe’s star with the bat, but Hamilton Masakadza‘s brief fireworks at the top constitute a promising sign for the team. Masakadza was sacked as captain prior to India’s visit, and went on to have a quiet ODI series. Zimbabwe’s most accomplished batsman’s hitting form could be vital if Vusi Sibanda cannot recover from the injury that kept him out of the first T20I.Yuzvendra Chahal had a disappointing T20I debut, offering the batsmen too much room to swing their arms and bowling the no-ball that precipitated Chigumbura’s assault. Nevertheless, his willingness to flight the ball in search of wickets and a potent googly make him a threat to batsmen. It also makes for compelling viewing.

Team news

Sibanda has joined Craig Ervine and Sean Williams on Zimbabwe’s injury list. Richmond Mutumbami, who had to retire hurt after taking a blow to the hip area on Saturday, will not be available either. This probably leaves the door open for Peter Moor, who will be a straight swap considering he is a specialist wicketkeeper, or Timycen Maruma.*Zimbabwe (probable): 1 Hamilton Masakadza, 2 Chamu Chibhabha, 3 Timycen Maruma/Peter Moor, 4 Sikandar Raza, 5 Malcolm Waller (wk), 6 Elton Chigumbura, 7 Tinotenda Mutombodzi, 8 Graeme Cremer (capt), 9 Neville Madziva, 10 Taurai Muzarabani, 11 Donald TiripanoIndia fielded five debutants in the first T20I, including Mandeep Singh, Rishi Dhawan and Jaydev Unadkat, who had their first outing of the tour. Unadkat and Dhawan bowled poorly; whether Dhoni chooses to give them another chance or brings Barinder Sran and Dhawal Kulkarni back is open to debate.India (probable): 1 KL Rahul, 2 Mandeep Singh, 3 Ambati Rayudu, 4 Manish Pandey, 5 Kedar Jadhav, 6 MS Dhoni (capt & wk), 7 Axar Patel, 8 Rishi Dhawan/Dhawal Kulkarni, 9 Yuzvendra Chahal, 10 Jasprit Bumrah, 11 Jaydev Unadkat/Barinder Sran

Pitch and conditions

The pitch is expected to be batting friendly again at Harare Sports Club. The size of the outfield should test the fielders and reward batsmen who run hard between the wickets.

Stats and trivia

  • Only once have Zimbabwe won consecutive T20I matches against Full Member oppositions – against Bangladesh in Khulna this January.
  • Since India made their debut in T20 cricket, only twice have they packed as many as five debutants into an XI – against Zimbabwe on Saturday and against Zimbabwe a year ago.

*June 20, 08.00GMT: The preview was updated after Richmond Mutumbami’s injury update came in

Australia on top after Voges' debut ton

Adam Voges became the oldest man to score a century on Test debut as Australia took control on the second day in Dominica

The Report by Brydon Coverdale04-Jun-2015
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsAdam Voges played patiently for his debut hundred•Getty Images

Adam Voges became the oldest man to score a century on Test debut as Australia took control on the second day in Dominica. It was a day of frustration and missed opportunities for West Indies, who had the chance to run through Australia but allowed the tail to wag and found themselves facing a 170-run first-innings deficit. They then lost both their openers cheaply late in the afternoon.

Smart stats

1 Australian batsmen who have scored a century on Test debut when batting at No. 5 – Adam Voges is the first.
35 Voges’ age (35y, 242d), making him the oldest batsmen to score a century on Test debut, going past Zimbabwe’s Dave Houghton (35y 117d), versus India in 1992.
6-80 Devendra Bishoo’s figures, the best ever by a West Indies legspinner in Tests, and the first five-for against Australia.
50 Test wickets for Bishoo, the second most by a West Indies legspinner, one behind David Holford who has 51.
201 Keeper dismissals effected by Denesh Ramdin, making him the third West Indies wicketkeeper to go past the 200-mark after Jeff Dujon (270) and Ridley Jacobs (219). Across countries, 16 keepers have achieved this feat.

Devendra Bishoo had given West Indies the perfect start by spinning out three batsmen before lunch and he finished with 6 for 80, but Voges remained a calm presence at the crease throughout Australia’s innings. The 97-run stand that he and Josh Hazlewood compiled for the last wicket could prove to be the difference, although Mitchell Johnson and Nathan Lyon also provided useful support.By stumps, West Indies were in an even bigger hole. Shai Hope edged Johnson to second slip and was sharply taken by Michael Clarke, and next ball Mitchell Starc swung one in to rattle the stumps of Kraigg Brathwaite. It left West Indies on 25 for 2 at stumps, still 145 runs behind, with Darren Bravo on 3 and Shane Dowrich on 1. A mountain of work remained for them on day three.For Australia, it was a day to celebrate the achievement of Voges, who at 35 replaced Zimbabwe’s David Houghton as Test cricket’s oldest debut centurion. Patience is no problem for Voges – he has had to wait 160 first-class matches for this opportunity – and he displayed impressive concentration throughout this innings, bringing up his hundred from his 187th delivery.Having made a brisk start on the first afternoon, Voges took a more steady approach on the second day, waiting for his opportunities to work runs through gaps and taking few risks. Rarely did he play a loose shot, although just after reaching his half-century he pulled Marlon Samuels and a diving Jermaine Blackwood at midwicket put down a tough chance.It was an example of the difference in fielding between the two sides: Australia grasped nearly everything in West Indies’ first innings, but West Indies let opportunities slip. Voges received another life on 104 when Hope dropped one at gully off Taylor, and Hazlewood was put down on 33 as the afternoon wore on.West Indies seemed unable to find the intensity they needed to finish the Australians off: the seventh-, ninth- and tenth-wicket partnerships were Australia’s best of the innings. They were six down when Voges nudged them past West Indies’ total of 148 but Johnson, Lyon and then Hazlewood all offered vital support to Voges, who never looked flustered as wickets fell.For a while it looked like Voges might be denied the chance to reach his hundred: he was on 77 when Hazlewood joined him at the wicket. But Hazlewood proved himself a worthy partner, defending capably as Voges kept the scoreboard ticking along and then moved to 98 with a six slammed down the ground off Jerome Taylor.Voges was still there on 130 when Hazlewood was bowled by Marlon Samuels for 39, completing Australia’s innings at 318. It was a wonderful recovery after Bishoo threatened to skittle them cheaply. During the morning, he turned the ball sharply but also varied his degree of spin, and found enough drift to deceive the batsmen.In the morning session, Bishoo claimed the three key wickets of Steven Smith, Shane Watson and Brad Haddin, and after the break he added Johnson and Starc. Smith (25) added eight to his overnight score before he was hoodwinked by Bishoo, advancing down the pitch only to see the ball drop short of him, spin past his edge and Denesh Ramdin complete the stumping.If it is rare for Smith to be outflighted by a spinner, it is not so uncommon for Watson, who on 11 drove hard and had his thick edge well caught at second slip by Jason Holder. Haddin showed some intent by launching a Bishoo wrong’un back over the bowler’s head for six, but Bishoo had his revenge by bowling Haddin for 8.It was a beautiful piece of legspin that fittingly came 22 years to the day after Shane Warne’s ball of the century tricked Mike Gatting. Bishoo similarly drifted the ball in and pitched it on leg stump, turning it perfectly past Haddin’s bat to clip the top of off stump.Johnson’s 52-run stand with Voges ended when Johnson top-edged a sweep and was caught at short fine leg for 20. Starc lasted only two balls, bowled for a duck when he tried to slog Bishoo, and a quick finish appeared possible. However, Bishoo had to go off for some treatment to his hand, and Lyon’s temperament was what Voges needed at the other end, quiet and unperturbed.Lyon managed 22 from 50 balls before he walked across his stumps and was trapped lbw by Shannon Gabriel, but Hazlewood was able to offer even greater support. Bishoo looked like having a seven-for when he trapped Voges lbw on 127, but a review suggested the ball would have turned past off stump and Voges was reprieved. It was just one more frustration on a disappointing day for West Indies.

Ajantha Mendis out of limited-overs squad

Ajantha Mendis, the spinner who has been struggling with a side strain, has been left out of the Sri Lanka squad for the Twenty20 and the first three ODIs against New Zealand

ESPNcricinfo staff25-Oct-2012

Sri Lanka squads for New Zealand series

Twenty20 squad: Angelo Mathews (capt), Nuwan Kulasekara (vice-capt), Dilshan Munaweera, Tillakaratne Dilshan, Kumar Sangakkara (wk), Dinesh Chandimal, Jeevan Mendis, Lahiru Thirimanne, Thisara Perera, Shaminda Eranga, Akila Dananjaya, Sachithra Senanayake, Upul Tharanga
Squad for first three ODIs: Mahela Jayawardene (capt), Angelo Mathews (vice-capt), Tillakaratne Dilshan, Kumar Sangakkara (wk), Dinesh Chandimal, Lahiru Thirimanne, Thisara Perera, Jeevan Mendis, Nuwan Kulasekara, Lasith Malinga, Shaminda Eranga, Upul Tharanga, Rangana Herath, Akila Dananjaya, PD Kaushal

Spinner Ajantha Mendis has been left out of the Sri Lanka squad for the Twenty20 and the first three ODIs against New Zealand due to a side strain he sustained early in the World Twenty20. Mahela Jayawardene, who led Sri Lanka to the World Twenty20 final earlier this month, and Lasith Malinga, who has been the team’s spearhead in limited overs, have also been rested for the Twenty20 match next Tuesday.Newly appointed Twenty20 captain Angelo Mathews has medium pace bowler Nuwan Kulasekara as his deputy in the Twenty20, in Malinga’s absence. Malinga was named vice-captain of the Twenty20 team for a year when Mathews was elevated to the captaincy for the same period. Left-arm spinner Rangana Herath has been omitted from the Twenty20 side and offspinner Sachithra Senanayake comes in.Three players from the squad that played Sri Lanka’s previous ODI assignment, the home one-dayers against India in July-August, miss out: fast bowlers Nuwan Pradeep and Isuru Udana, and batsman Chamara Kapugedera. Akila Dananjaya, the rookie offspinner who claimed five wickets in three games at the World Twenty20, including a spell of 1 for 16 in the final, gets his maiden ODI call-up.The only newcomer in the one-day squad is 19-year-old offspinner Tharindu Kaushal, who is yet to make his domestic debut in any format. Kaushal was the second-highest wicket-taker for Sri Lanka at the recent U-19 World Cup in Australia, taking 11 wickets at 15.45.After Sri Lanka’s World Twenty20 final loss the selectors had expressed a desire to build a specialised Twenty20 team distinct from the ODI side, with an emphasis on batting firepower. However, 11 of the 13 players in the Twenty20 squad were in the World Twenty20 squad, and the only batting addition – Upul Tharanga – has largely been treated as an ODI specialist in the past.Sri Lanka play New Zealand in a Twenty20 and ODI in Pallekele, before the teams move to Colombo and Hambantota where they play two ODIs at each venue. The limited-overs leg of the tour will be followed by two Tests.

Hampshire sign Katich, release Pothas

Hampshire have signed Simon Katich as their overseas player for next season but released Nic Pothas,

ESPNcricinfo staff16-Sep-2011Hampshire have signed Simon Katich as their overseas player for next season but released Nic Pothas, the wicketkeeper, after his contract expired. Jimmy Adams, the opening batsman who led the side in the closing weeks of the summer in place of Dominic Cork, has been confirmed as captain for next year as the county aim to bounce back from Championship relegation.Katich’s deal means a return to the club he played for between 2003 and 2005. He should be available for the entire season after losing his place in the Australia Test team and will add further strength to a top order that includes Adams, Michael Carberry and Neil McKenzie.”I’m really looking forward to going back to The Rose Bowl as I have many good friends and memories from my previous time at the club,” Katich said. “Hampshire have been great to my family and I during my career and I am looking forward to helping the club continue to have success.”Giles White, the Hampshire manager, said: “We’re delighted with the signing of Simon. He comes back to us, having been with us before, because he’s enjoyed his time here and we’ve really enjoyed it when he’s played for us in the past. He’s everything we need in an overseas player at this stage.”He’s a quality player, first and foremost. But he’s a very good man as well and the lads respect him highly so he’s a good bloke to have around the changing room. His availability’s very good too so, with all that coupled together, we’re very pleased.”Meanwhile, Pothas, who scored over 10,000 runs during his Hampshire career, insists he has no plans to retire from professional cricket at the age of 37. He hadn’t been in the team since suffering appendicitis midway through the season and Hampshire now look to put their faith behind Michael Bates.”Although I have no intention of retiring from cricket and am sad to be leaving Hampshire, when the time is right I’m sure I will continue to explore other options within cricket,” Pothas said. “I still have a number of events left for my benefit year with the club and hopefully I will enjoy the continued support of our loyal fans.”In addition, I have a number of interests within the property market outside cricket, as anyone who knows me will testify, and I will continue to explore these while I consider my options. I would like to thank all the fans and supporters who I’ve had the privilege to meet and entertain over the last nine years. Their support has been both generous and invaluable and for that I am eternally grateful.”Kolpak signings Johann Myburgh and Friedel de Wet as well as Academy player Jamie Miller have also been released ahead of next season.

Kings XI Punjab CEO quits

Kings XI Punjab, one of two IPL franchises terminated by the BCCI, has lost its second chief executive in three years. Anil Srivatsa, who joined the franchise a year ago, left the team by mutual consent on August 15

Tariq Engineer16-Oct-2010Kings XI Punjab, one of two IPL franchises terminated by the BCCI, has lost its second chief executive in three years. Anil Srivatsa, who joined the franchise a year ago, left the team by mutual consent on August 15. He made it clear, however, that his leaving had nothing to with the events surrounding the subsequent expulsion of the team.Srivatsa told ESPNcricinfo he had heard rumours about the board planning to expel the franchise around the time of his departure, but nobody took them seriously. He expressed disappointment at the BCCI’s decision, saying he hopes it won’t turn out to be a case of “killing the goose that laid the golden egg [the IPL]. I hope there is wisdom behind the decisions; professional wisdom rather than personal agendas.”Srivatsa left because despite hiring a chief executive, micro-management made the position redundant, something both sides came to realise. “The IPL is not a place ready for professionals yet,” he said. “If this is looked on as a business where you let your management do their job, a lot would change.”At the same time, he said the IPL was a wonderful experience and he enjoyed the challenge of building the team’s brand and creating a fan following. “IPL as a product itself was amazing. It was a learning that no other place could teach you.”Representatives for Kings XI Punjab declined to comment for this story and Srivatsa is still listed as the chief executive on the team’s website. During his tenure, Punjab finished last in the 2010 IPL and were dogged by accusations that Yuvraj Singh was deliberately underperforming after losing the captaincy to Kumar Sangakkara.Prior to joining Punjab, Srivatsa spent three years at Radio Today Broadcasting, an India Today group venture. He also has 16 years of experience in the cable distribution and broadcasting business in the United States. He had replaced Neil Maxwell, who was the chief executive for the first season.Earlier this week the IPL governing council ejected Rajasthan Royals and Punjab from the IPL on charges of breaching shareholding and ownership norms.

India, Sri Lanka, South Africa to play women's ODI tri-series in April-May

The series will be played from April 27 to May 11 in Colombo

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Mar-2025Sri Lanka will host India and South Africa for a women’s ODI tri-series in April and May, the SLC announced on Thursday. This tri-series was not part of the Future Tours Programme originally.Each team will play the others twice – making it four matches per team – before the top two teams play the final. The series will start with hosts Sri Lanka taking on India. All of them will be day games, played at the R Premadasa Stadium in Colombo from April 27 to May 11.Sri Lanka are currently on a white-ball tour of New Zealand, while most of India’s players are participating in the WPL at home. Some South African players are also at the WPL. Until this tri-series was announced, South Africa’s next international assignment was a tour of the West Indies in June.This tri-series will give the three teams extra prep time in the lead up to the ODI World Cup in October this year in India.Sri Lanka are currently the Asia Cup champions, while South Africa had reached the semi-finals of the last ODI World Cup, in 2022, after knocking India out in the league stages. India are, however, the highest-ranked of the three at third – South Africa are fourth and Sri Lanka seventh – in the ICC ODI rankings.

Sri Lanka women’s tri-series schedule

April 27, Sri Lanka vs India
April 29, India vs South Africa
May 1, Sri Lanka vs South Africa
May 4, Sri Lanka vs India
May 6, South Africa vs India
May 8, Sri Lanka vs South Africa
May 11, final

Webster, Hope secure draw for Tasmania amid late Western Australia flourish

Haskett, Rocchiccioli and Morris threatened to take the game away on a lifeless WACA pitch but Tasmania hung on

Tristan Lavalette18-Oct-2023Western Australia sniffed a remarkable Sheffield Shield victory on a sedate WACA pitch, but Tasmania hung on to force a draw.After only 18 wickets fell in the first 10 sessions, the match unexpectedly came alive late on day four when WA’s attack tore through Tasmania’s stuttering batting order.Tasmania wobbled at 70 for 5 early in the final session before Beau Webster and Brad Hope guided them to safety.Related

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“It was nice to hang on,” Webster said. “It was a different WACA wicket…it was a different sort of challenge than we are used to coming out west.”Emerging offspinner Corey Rocchiccioli continued his strong start to the Shield season as he targeted the rough to particularly trouble the left-handed batters. He finished with five wickets for the match and looms as a bowler of interest for the national selectors.Speedster Lance Morris impressed in his comeback having not played first-class cricket since March as he works his way back from a back injury that ruled him out of the Ashes.Morris, whose workload was managed, bowled with trademark hostility and hit speeds regularly around 140kph. He took three wickets from 32 overs for the match, but will be rested for WA’s next Shield match against South Australia in Adelaide starting on October 26.The late fireworks almost overshadowed a lifeless WACA surface where batting unusually dominated almost throughout. Captains Sam Whiteman and Jordan Silk came close to making double centuries in high-scoring first innings from both teams.It was a different pitch used to the sluggish surface of the Shield opener when WA easily beat Victoria. The ground is still feeling the effects of Australian rules football being played on it during the off-season.”With the footy taking its toll there was no grass on the wicket,” Whiteman said. “Knew it was going to be flatter, but I thought we did really well there to put Tasmania under pressure to nearly get a result.”WA should feel buoyed with their stirring late efforts with the prospect of an outright result appearing forlorn when the final day started.Trailing by two runs, there was no sign of an early WA declaration as the normally aggressive Ashton Turner – Perth Scorchers captain – was content with a conservative approach.But Turner and Charles Stobo, who hit a maiden first-class half-century, put the foot down before lunch as Tasmania resorted to nine fielders on the boundary.After WA declared at lunch with a lead of 135 runs, all eyes turned to Tasmania opener Caleb Jewell who fell to Morris for a golden duck in the first innings.Jewell’s nerves eased when he elegantly drove Morris on his second ball as it appeared the match was about to merely go through the motions. But any thoughts of a breezy net session was put to bed when opener Tim Ward was trapped lbw by Rocchiccioli.Towering left-armer Liam Haskett menaced with his bounce and he quickly accounted for Charlie Wakim and Silk, who was displeased after being caught at short-leg off his hip.It was left to Jewell and Matthew Wade to steady Tasmania as they batted through to tea. But the twists continued when Jewell was spectacularly bowled by a searing Morris yorker then Wade was trapped lbw by Rocchiccioli in a decision he clearly disagreed with.Jewell has scored just 27 runs in his last three innings after starting the Shield season with an 87 against South Australia. He is deemed a contender to replace opener David Warner, who is set to retire from Test cricket this summer.WA were on a roll before Webster, Hope and, ultimately, the pitch thwarted their bid for a memorable victory.

Seven Tests, 135 ODIs and 159 T20Is in first women's international FTP

The programme runs till the end of April 2025, leading up to the 50-over World Cup in India

ESPNcricinfo staff16-Aug-2022The first women’s Future Tours Programme (FTP), announced by the ICC on Tuesday, contains a total of 301 international matches between 2022 and 2025. The cycle has already begun – in May this year – and runs until the conclusion of the ODI World Cup in 2025.The calendar for women’s cricket in the three-year cycle comprises seven Tests, 159 T20Is and 135 ODIs, which include fixtures for the 2022-25 ICC Women’s Championship, the qualification pathway for the next ODI World Cup in India.Related

  • ICC set to limit clashes between franchise leagues and women's internationals

  • India to play two Tests in 2022-25 cycle; Asia Cup slotted for October this year

  • BCCI marks window in March 2023 for inaugural women's IPL

  • Plans on 'to bridge gap between women and men's prize money'

Among the highlights of the FTP is the standalone Ashes, starting with England’s tour of Australia in 2024-25. England play the most Tests (five), followed by Australia (four), South Africa (three) and India (two).India are slated to play one Test match each against England and Australia at home. England last played a Test in India in 2005, while Australia’s Test in 2023-24 will be their first in the country since 1984.As part of the 2022-25 ICC Women’s Championship, teams will play three-match bilateral ODI series to try and qualify the 2025 World Cup. The addition of Bangladesh and Ireland makes the ICC Women’s Championship a 10-team tournament this time, compared to eight in the previous cycle. Each team will play eight ODI series (four home and four away) and the top five in the standings will earn direct qualification to the 2025 World Cup, along with hosts India. The bottom four teams in the ICC Women’s Championship will play four other teams in a qualifying tournament for the final two spots in the 2025 World Cup.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

“This is a huge moment for the women’s game,” ICC general manager of cricket, Wasim Khan, said. “This FTP not only lends certainty to future cricket tours but also sets the base for a structure that is sure to grow in the coming years.”Bangladesh, for example, will have 24 international matches in the new three-year cycle, compared to 11 in the previous cycle. Bangladesh, who had played Australia, England and New Zealand for the first time ever at the 2022 World Cup in New Zealand, will play each of these teams in a bilateral series comprising three matches apiece. Ireland will also have an increase in games because of their inclusion in the women’s FTP.All the bilateral T20I matches in the FTP will count towards team rankings, which will serve as the primary mechanism to determine the teams that qualify for ICC global events.There is a clear window in the women’s FTP in March 2023, which has been earmarked for the inaugural Women’s IPL.